PEARLS OF GEEZER WISDOM
Take
a few minutes out from trying out all these recipes and read these camping tips gleaned from the collective brains of the
GEEZERS
When camping in one spot for a few days, Dig a hole for your coolers. Line the hole with plastic or foil shiny
side in. Place your cooler in the hole and cover with a blanket or extra sleeping bag. The ice you came with may go home with
you. Before you leave, cover
.the hole, replace the sod, and leave no trace.
Face
your tents to the east. The early morning sun quickly dries out dampness and drives out the chill. Besides, what better way
to greet the morning than to watch the sunrise,
Cut both ends from tin cans and step on them to flatten before storing them in trash bags.
Critters have been known to stick their noses in, get their heads stuck, and die. Better yet, open your cans at home, pour
into double zip-lock bags and take these along instead.
When broiling
bacon over an open grill, try cooking it on foil. It will prevent charring, which often happens when you cook bacon on a grill.
Racks
from an old oven make good lightweight grills. Spray with Teflon spray for easier cleaning. Don't use racks from old refrigerators.
Some were made with cadmium plating, which when heated can give off toxic fumes or spill its way into your food. Cadmium is
a 3heavy metal that is toxic when ingested or inhaled.
To prevent pasta from boiling over, add one teaspoon of olive oil to the cooking water before
adding pasta.
4 ounces of cheese will yield 1 cup of grated or cubed cheese.
For a fun and extremely
messy break in a long term camp, order a couple of chilled watermelons from the commissary. Spread out a large clean poly
tarp. Have each patrol hold the melons above their heads and then on a signal drop them onto the tarp. Yes, we said BUST them
and let them eat the melon with their fingers.
If you want to save room in your cooler and still have to keep eggs
fresh, make a mixture of one pound of lime to one gallon of water in a plastic one gallon jug, put your eggs in the jug, and
add the lime water. The eggs will keep without refrigeration for some time.
Tents and dining flies tend to get a might
funky toward the middle of a long term camp. Get a large red apple and poke several small holes through the skin. Plug every
hole with a whole clove and hang in the tent or dining fly. Stories have it that it will also cut down on the flying critters
in the daytime.
When pitching tents or putting up dining flies, drive your stakes in at
an angle toward the tent at about a 30 degree angle. There is less chance of the stake pulling out on its own in a wind and
you will have less effort to pull them out when it is time to break camp.
MORE PEARLS
If
you're dehydrated, a hot drink may hit the spot faster than a cold one. Recent studies have shown that water gets into your
bloodstream faster from drinking hot liquids. Try heating that Gatorade and watch what happens.
Anterior
nosebleeds can be stopped by pinching the nostrils together for 10-15 minutes. If that doesn't work, try moistening some cotton
with Afrin nasal spray. Twist the cotton into a cone and insert into the offending nostril. Leave enough out to remove later.
Reapply pressure for another 10 minutes.
Tea
in high concentrations, thanks to the tannins it contains, has a pain easing effect on sunburn. Take a teabag, soak it in
cool or tepid water, then dab it on the area. Let it dry, then repeat.
Pulling is different than lifting. Pull a heavy
load with your waist so that your legs do the manual labor and your back comes along for the ride. Pulling a heavy load is
preferable to lifting one.
Powdered ginger may be more
effective than over the counter medications for motion sickness. Ginger is safe. You can take two 450mg capsules about 10 minutes before travel, and two
more again if you feel queasy.
MORE PEARLS II
If the plastic
caps come off your pack frame, replace them with rubber tips used on walking canes and furniture legs. They cost less than
those designed for your pack, are more efficient in protecting your frame ends from stress, and won't slip on ice or wet rocks.
Old closed-cell
foam sleeping pads can serve a number of purposes: Cut boot innersoles for extra padding and insulation; A small square underneath
your trail stove insulates it from snow and cold; Make a seat pad that can be rolled up and stored in your pack; Insulate
your water bottle by wrapping it with a piece - then glue the edges together with contact cement - cut out a circle for the
bottom and glue it on. Duct tape is a good blister preventer if you are caught without moleskin.
To rig up a quick
clothesline, double your nylon cord and twist it repeatedly. Slide the clothing in between twists and the items will hold
even in the strongest wind.
Plastic bags
will keep your feet warmer and dryer in cold rain and wet snow. Put the bags on between your liner sock and thicker outer
sock. Use bread bags or thin produce bags from the supermarket.
Put your water
bottle in a damp wool sock and hang it from your (pack to keep the water cooler in summer. If you find you don't have enough
insulation to keep warm in cold weather
when sleeping,
make a vapor barrier from a trash bag. Stuff 8the bag all the way down in you sleeping bag & crawl in.
MORE PEARLS III
Tightly roll
four newspaper sheets together, tie with string at 2in intervals, then cut off each segment between the strings. Melt paraffin
(sold in 1 lb boxes as canning wax). Dip each segment into 6pot and cool. Makes "fire bugs", a cinch fire starter.
If
you can't stand the taste of powdered milk, try adding two tablespoons of non-dairy creamer to each quart.
When packing
zip-lock bags for individual pack meals, color code each bag with a Magic Marker, then record each color to each meal on .a
3x5 card and put it in your with your map.